2021 Mazda CX-5
The 2021 Mazda CX-5 2.0 Active Edition Auto FWD offers South African buyers a stylish and reliable used SUV at an affordable price. Known for its blend of performance and comfort, this vehicle provides excellent value for those seeking a versatile family car with a touch of luxury.
Powered by a 2.0L SKYACTIV-G petrol engine with 156 Hp, it features a smooth CVT transmission, ensuring efficient fuel consumption of approximately 7.2 L/100km. The Mazda CX-5 comfortably seats five across five doors, making it perfect for daily commuting and weekend adventures. Its practical design combines a spacious interior with modern features, ideal for South African roads.
Located in Manors, Pinetown, KwaZulu-Natal, this used Mazda CX-5 is available for viewing and test drives. Contact your local dealer today to explore financing options, compare prices, and buy this reliable SUV at the best price. Don’t miss the opportunity to own a stylish, fuel-efficient vehicle.
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Mazda CX-5
Mazda’s CX-5 sits right in the thick of South Africa’s cutthroat family SUV market, squaring up to the Toyota RAV4, Volkswagen Tiguan, and Nissan X-Trail. This is the SUV for someone who wants a genuinely upmarket feel but doesn’t care about a badge war. You’ve got petrol and diesel options, automatic or CVT gearboxes, and a price spectrum that’s almost comically broad. There are 27 active listings running from R169,900 to R664,800, but the real meat sits above R400k — that’s where you’ll find the newer, more desirable examples. With twelve new and fifteen used units in the mix, you’re not short on choices, whether you’re hunting low-mileage or a real bargain. The 2.0 Carbon Edition Auto FWD stands out as the one most buyers will see on dealer floors — ten listings, priced from R419,900 up to R664,800. If you’re trawling the used market, you’ll spot models from 2016 to 2026 with an average of 52,636 km, which is decent value if you pack smart. For those pounding the N1 or N3, the 2.2DE AWD Akera diesel makes sense, thanks to its affordable price bracket (R269,900 to R329,900) and solid torque. Where the CX-5 pulls ahead of the X-Trail is with its interior: materials feel thoughtfully chosen, not just thrown together for a price point, and that’s the point when you’re spending R500k-plus. The RAV4 comes close on refinement, but Mazda still has the edge in how the cabin’s physical controls and materials gel — on paper at least, it’s what the CX-5 should have been from the start.
Mazda
Mazda’s always played a different hand in South Africa. You don’t buy one because you can’t afford a Golf or a Corolla, and you’re not chasing a German badge either. It’s what the Mazda should have been from the start: a step above the everyday, without the Euro tax. If you scan the 88 models listed, from a budget-friendly R98,500 up to a slightly eyebrow-raising R1,049,200, you’ll see the sweet spot sits right where it matters for real buyers — between R135k and R470k. That’s the territory where families weigh up boot space versus monthly repayments, not badge envy. Seventy of those cars are used, which says more about Mazda’s reputation for holding value than it does about showroom shortages. Hyundai and Kia are breathing down Mazda’s neck in every segment, while Honda circles the hatch and SUV territory, but Mazda’s carved out a loyal corner. The CX-5 is the backbone here, with 27 options starting at R169,900 and topping out at R664,800. It’s the SUV that finally made Mazda a serious contender for folks who’d never have considered the badge before. The Mazda 2 hatch is the sensible gateway — 20 listings, kicking off at R134,900. Need something perched higher? The CX-3 sits between R189,000 and R459,400, doing the urban crossover thing. The BT-50 bakkie? Ten listings, but it’s a niche call against the Ranger and Hilux — you’d have to want to be different. SUVs dominate Mazda’s range, hatchbacks come next, and most engines are petrol, which tracks with what buyers actually want. Where Mazda really edges out Hyundai and Kia is in the cabin: tactile buttons, solid-feeling plastics, and seat comfort that puts rivals on notice. On paper at least, that’s what keeps Mazda buyers coming back.
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2021 Mazda CX-5
Est. monthly payment:
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Mazda CX-5 FAQs
Common questions about the Mazda CX-5 in South Africa.
